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8/10/2019 Platelet Cases
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8/10/2019 Platelet Cases
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CAMLT Distance Learning Course DL-985 2 California Association for Medical Laboratory Technology
HEMATOLOGY CASE STUDIES: PLATELETS
OBJECTIVES:After completing this course the participant will be able to:
1. Differentiate among the causes of thrombocythemia.2.
Explain how to determine the platelet count when the count is above the upper reportablerange of the analyzer.
3. Estimate the platelet count from the blood smear.4. List the signs and symptoms of Essential Thrombocythemia.5. Enumerate the causes of thrombocytopenia.6. Discuss the causes of pseudothrombocytopenia.7. Explain the methods of determining the causes of pseudothrombocytopenia.
Case #1A 44-year-old woman comes in for a complete blood count (CBC) as part of a routine
physical exam. The results from the hematology analyzer, Cell-Dyn 1700 (AbbottDiagnostics), are:
WBC 7.5 K/L RBC 4.22 M/LLym 28.7 % HGB 12.4 g/dLMID 10.4 % HCT 38.6 %Gran 60.9 % MCV 91.4 fL
MCH 29.3 pgPLT >>>> K/L MCHC 32.0 g/dL
RDW 13.5 %MID cells may include less frequentlyoccurring and rare cells correlating to
monocytes, eosinophils, basophils,blasts, and other precursor white cells.
Questions:
1. What is abnormal about her CBC?2. Which parts can be reported?3. What procedures can be done regarding the abnormal result?
Answers:1. The platelet count is above the upper reportable range.2. The WBC histogram and 3-part differential are normal and can be reported. The RBC
histogram is normal and can be reported.3. To determine the platelet count:
a. Make a 1:1 dilution of the whole blood and re-run the platelet count. Correct the plateletcount for the dilution.b. Make a smear of the whole blood and examine for platelet morphology and numbers.
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Discussion:The platelet count on 1:1 diluted blood was 534, so the platelet count is 2 x 534 = 1,068
K/L (normal is 150-400 K/L).On blood smears made from EDTA-blood and stained with a Romanowsky stain, platelets
are round or oval, 2-4 m in diameter, and separated from one another. The platelet count can be
estimated from the smear. At 1000x magnification (oil immersion), this is equivalent to about 7-30 platelets per oil immersion field (OIF). Count the number of platelets in 10 oil immersionfields. Divide the total by 10 to get the average number of platelets per field. Each platelet seenon the smear equates to approximately 15,000/L. Multiply the average number per OIF to getthe platelet estimate1. See Image #1. In this case the average number of platelets per field was70. The estimate equals 70 x 15,000 = 1,050 K/L. Thus the platelet estimate derived from thesmear in Images #1 and #2 correlates with the corrected platelet count of 1,068 K/L.
The causes of increased platelet counts include:Inflammatory disorders Iron deficiency anemiaSplenectomy Chronic granulocytic leukemiaPolycythemia vera Undetected cancerEssential (primary) thrombocythemia
Since the patient had no symptoms, no history of splenectomy, and normal WBC and RBChemograms, all except essential (primary) thrombocythemia can be eliminated or are unlikely.
Essential (Primary) Thrombocythemia2Essential thrombocythemia (ET) is a myeloproliferative disease. These diseases are a group
of disorders that share features that include the clonal overproduction of one or more blood celllines. Clonal diseases begin with a mutation in one or more bone marrow cell lines.Myeloproliferative diseases include polycythemia vera, myelofibrosis, chronic granulocyticleukemia, and essential thrombocythemia.
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In ET there is overproduction of megakaryocytes, the precursor to platelets (thrombocytes).Abnormalities in platelet aggregation and adhesiveness tests suggest defective platelet function
3.
In about half the patients with ET there is a mutation of the JAK2 (Janus kinase 2) gene in theirblood cells. In the others the cause is unknown.
ET occurs mostly in adults. There are about 0.1 to 2.4 new cases per 100,000 in the U.S.
each year. The disease does not ordinarily shorten life expectancy, but serious complications canoccur, so the patient needs to be followed by a physician.Many patients have no symptoms. In others signs, symptoms and complications of ET result
from the increased numbers of platelets in the peripheral blood. Since platelets are involved inthe process of clot formation in response to blood vessel injury, the most common complicationof ET is blockage of blood vessels by excess platelets (thrombosis). Less often the increasedplatelets cause bleeding.
Signs, symptoms, and complications include:
Burning or throbbing in the feet
Headache, dizziness, and weakness or numbness on one side to the body or other signs of
inadequate blood flow to the brain Thrombosis (abnormal clotting)
Unexpected or exaggerated bleeding (infrequent, associated with very high plateletcount)
Enlarged spleen
Complications of pregnancy
Diagnosis of ET may occur when a higher than normal platelet count occurs on a routineblood count (as with this patient), or on a blood count that is ordered on a patient who has ablood clot, unexpected bleeding, or an enlarged spleen and there is no other cause for theincreased numbers of platelets. In ET the platelet count is over 600 K/L blood and remains
high in subsequent counts. Although the diagnosis cannot be made by laboratory tests alone, thefollowing may be useful: JAK2 mutation in blood cells, slightly lower than normal bloodhemoglobin and slightly higher WBC count, no evidence of other myeloproliferative diseases,and an examination of the bone marrow. The bone marrow will show a significant increase inmegakaryocytes and masses of platelets.
Treatment of patients with ET is based on the risk of clotting or bleeding complications. Ifthere are no signs or symptoms, the patient is seen for regular checkups. If the patient has highrisk as determined by previous clotting or bleeding episodes, a history of a clot, cardiovascularrisk factors--diabetes, high cholesterol, smoking, hypertension, obesity--therapy may beconsidered.
Drug therapy may include aspirin, hydroxyurea, anagrelide, or interferon alfa. Aspirin,
although decreasing clotting, may increase the risk of bleeding. When the platelet count is veryhigh and the patient suffers acute clotting, plateletpheresis may be done on an emergency basis.
This patient had no symptoms and was given follow-up appointments.
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Case #2A 38-year-old female inpatient has the following results on her initial complete blood
count on Coulter Gen-S (Beckman-Coulter):
WBC 8.9 K/L RBC 4.86 M/L
NE 57.9 % HGB 14.4 g/dLLY 33.4 % HCT 42.5 %MO 6.3 % MCV 87.4 fLEO 1.9 % MCH 29.8 pgBA 0.5 % MCHC 34.0 g/dL
RDW 12.5 %PLT 64 K/fL
Suspect/Definitive Messages/Flags: MPV 6.9 fLMicro/Fragmented Red CellsGiant Platelets R flag on Platelet Count & MPVPlatelet clumps Comments:
Do not verify platelets; review firstand redraw if necessary
Questions1. What is abnormal about the blood count?2. Which parts of the CBC can be reported?3. What would you do to investigate the abnormal result?
Answers:1. The platelet count is abnormally low and there are flags for microcytic or fragmented
RBC, giant platelets, or platelet clumps.2. The WBC histogram and differential are normal and can be reported.3. The platelet and RBC histogram patterns are consistent with platelet clumps, fragmented
red cells, or microcytic red cells. Make and review the smear (See Image #3) for platelet
clumps, fragmented red cells, or small red cells before verifying the platelet count.
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Discussion:The platelet count was below normal, a condition known as thrombocytopenia.
The causes of decreased platelet counts are4:
Decreased Production
Leukemia or lymphoma
Cancer treatments such as radiation or chemotherapyVarious anemiasToxic chemicalsMedications: diuretics, chloramphenicolViruses: chickenpox, mumps, Epstein-Barr, parvovirus, AIDSAlcohol in excessGenetic conditions: Wiskott-Aldrich, May-Hegglin, Bernard-Soulier syndromes
Abnormal distributionSplenomegaly with sequestration in the spleen
Increased destruction
Autoimmune diseases: Idiopathic (immune) thrombocytopenic purpura
Medications: quinine, antibiotics containing sulfa, Dilantin, vancomycin,rifampin, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
Surgery: man-made heart valves, blood vessel grafts, bypass machinesInfection: septicemiaPregnancy: about 5% of pregnant women develop mild decreaseThrombotic thrombocytopenic purpuraDisseminated intravascular coagulation
Pseudothrombocytopenia
Partial clotting of specimenEDTA-platelet clumpingPlatelet satellitism around WBCs
Cold agglutininsGiant platelets
Results of the blood smear evaluation(Case #2, Image #3):The smear showed numerous platelet clumps (make sure to examine the edges of the
smear since the clumps may migrate there; Images #4 and #5). There were no giant platelets,fragmented RBC, or small RBC. To obtain an automated platelet count, obtain a blood specimendrawn into Sodium Citrate (NaCitrate).
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Results of the platelet count on the NaCitrate specimen (Case #2, Image #6):There were no flags or error messages. The platelet count of 289 K/L needs to be
corrected for the dilution of the blood by liquid NaCitrate as follows:289 x 1.1 (dilution factor) = 318 K/L
The diagnosis is EDTA-platelet clumping. This condition may persist for decades without any
evidence of abnormal hemostasis. EDTA-platelet clumping needs to be recognized anddocumented in the patients chart to prevent unnecessary treatment for thrombocytopenia, and toguide future laboratory tests.
Causes of pseudothrombocytopenia are as follows:
Partial clotting of the specimen:With a low platelet count the first procedure is to examine the specimen for evidence ofclotting as well as to make a smear and look for evidence of platelet clumping. Whenblood clots, platelets adhere to the clot and are removed from the fluid blood. If evidenceof micro-clots or clumping is seen, obtain a new specimen.
EDTA-Induced Platelet Agglutination (EIPA) (EDTA-platelet clumping):EIPA is an in-vitrophenomenon due to the presence of naturally occurring autoantibodyagainst a cryptantigen on the GPIIb/IIIa platelet receptor. Under normal in vivoconditions this antigen is not accessible for antibody binding (crypt or hidden antigen).When calcium is chelated by EDTA, the GPIIb protein undergoes a structural change thatexposes the cryptantigen. The antibody can then bind to the exposed site and crosslink toother platelets causing agglutination. The condition occurs in 0.1 to 2% of hospitalizedpatients5.
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CAMLT Distance Learning Course DL-985 8 California Association for Medical Laboratory Technology
Platelet satellitismIn this phenomenon platelets rosette around neutrophils or rarely around other cells. Thesatellite platelets are not counted by automated cell counters, resulting in spuriousthrombocytopenia. Platelet satellitism is caused by EDTA-dependent antiplatelet andantineutrophil IgG antibodies in the patients plasma (5).
The phenomenon has not been associated with any disease state or drug and is thought tobe benign.The diagnosis is made by making a blood smear and looking for platelet rosettes: Images#7 and #8. This needs to be documented in the patients chart.
Cold agglutinins
Spontaneous EDTA-independent agglutination associated with cold antibodies is rare.The condition should be considered when agglutination occurs in citrate and heparin aswell as EDTA anticoagulants. This phenomenon is temperature dependent. The
specimen should be maintained at 37C or warmed to 37C to obtain an accurateplatelet count6.
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Giant plateletsGiant platelets that are 36 fL or larger will be counted as red cells (See Images #9 and#10) in most automated electronic platelet counters, resulting in spuriously low plateletcounts. Low platelet counts along with instrument flagging of giant platelets should
prompt the operator to confirm the abnormal platelet count by blood smearreview/platelet estimate or perform a manual platelet count. The confirmatory method ofchoice employs a manual platelet count using phase-contrast microscopy. Manualplatelet counts include three steps: dilution of the blood with simultaneous lysis of RBCswith ammonium oxalate; sampling the diluted suspension into a measured volume using ahemocytometer; and counting the platelets in that volume1. When significant numbers ofgiant platelets are counted as red cells, spuriously low platelet counts cannot be reported.The platelet estimate or manual platelet count must be reported in the place of automatedplatelet count.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTSMajor funding for photographs used in this presentation was provided by:
California Health Foundation and Trust (CHFT)
Healthcare Laboratory Workforce Initiative (HLWI) of the Healthcare Foundation ofNorthern and Central California
California Association for Medical Laboratory Technology (CAMLT)
All images were photographed by Dora W. Goto, MS, CLS, MT(ASCP). Many thanksalso to the laboratory staff at Bay Valley Medical Group, Hayward, CA for savinginstrument printouts and corresponding blood smears in support of continuing medicaltechnology education.
REFERENCES1. McPherson RA, Rincus, MR. Henrys clinical diagnosis and management by
laboratory methods. 21sted. Philadelphia, PA: W.B. Saunders Company, 2006.
2. www.lls.org
3.
McKenzie S. Clinical Laboratory Hematology. Upper Saddle River, NJ: PearsonPrentice-Hall; 2004:525
4.
http://home.columbus.rr.com/allen/thrombocytopenia.htm5. http://www.pathoindia.com/newspath107.html6. Schimmer A, Mody M, Sager M, et al. Platelet Cold Agglutinin: a flow cytometric
analysis, Transfusion Science, Vol 19:3, Sept 1998
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Review QuestionsCourse #DL-985
Chose the onebest answer.
1.
360 platelets are counted in 10 oil immersion fields on a conventionally made bloodsmear. The platelet estimate isa. 36,000/Lb. 54,000/Lc. 360,000/Ld. 540,000/L
2. If the number of platelets is above the reportable range on an automated instrument, thefirst recommended procedure is to
a. prepare a smear and count the number of platelets/10 OIFb. do a manual platelet count
c.
report the number of platelets beyond the reportable range without furtheranalysisd.
dilute the blood and run the diluted blood through the automated instrument
3. Causes of increased platelet counts include all but which of the following:a. splenectomyb. platelet satellitismc. Chronic granulocytic leukemiad. Essential Thrombocythemia
4. The most common symptom of Essential Thrombocythemia isa. thrombosisb.
bleedingc. burning of the feetd. enlarged spleen
5. Of the following causes of thrombocytopenia which is classified as increaseddestruction?
a. chickenpoxb. disseminated intravascular coagulationc. chloramphenicold. May-Hegglin Anomaly
6.
EDTA induced platelet aggregation is caused bya. fibrin strands in the blood specimenb. EDTA bridges between plateletsc. a cryptantigen-antibody reactiond.
reaction between platelets and the glass slide
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7. A blood specimen is taken in NaCitrate. The platelet count on an automated instrumentis 305,000/L. What is the corrected platelet count?
a. 33,550/Lb. 277,300/Lc. 335,500/L
d.
305,000/L
8. A blood smear is made on a patient with a low platelet count. Platelets are seen attachedto the periphery of neutrophils. Which of the following applies to this finding?
a. Neutrophils are attempting to phagocytose platelets.b. The patient may exhibit bleeding problems.c. It is found in patients who are taking sulfonamides.d. It is caused by an EDTA dependent antiplatelet-antineutrophil antibody.
9. The best part of the smear to see agglutinated platelets isa. the edge
b.
the central partc. the thick partd.
agglutinated platelets are not seen on smears
10.Cold agglutinin-caused platelet agglutination can be diagnosed bya. drawing blood into NaCitrate.
b. maintaining blood at 37C.c. drawing blood into heparin.
d. cooling the blood to 15C.
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CAMLT Distance Learning Course DL-985 13 California Association for Medical Laboratory Technology
Course #DL-985 - HEMATOLOGY CASE STUDIES: PLATELETSRegistration/Answersheet - 1.0 CE Credit
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